Yes, #238 is "Amnesia", vintage 1983.  I bought her about a year ago.  
She resides at the boat dock in my back yard, on the community lake here, 
called the Islands.  
We regularly take her to the larger lakes in Arizona for great sailing.
She's a terrific boat!

Jim Willerton
M15 #238 "Amnesia" 
Gilbert, AZ

 


-----Original Message-----
From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
sion.com]On Behalf Of William B. Riker
Sent: Monday, July 11, 2005 6:59 PM
To: 'For and about Montgomery Sailboats'
Subject: RE: M_Boats: And Yet Another M-sighting


Tod, 

I've kept a spreadsheet on M15 owners and it shows 238 is (or, most likely,
was) named "Amnesia" out of Tempe, AZ.  

Bill

 
-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, July 11, 2005 6:23 PM
To: 'For and about Montgomery Sailboats'
Subject: M_Boats: And Yet Another M-sighting

Saturday I also spotted a Montgomery, a 15, hull #238 IIRC.  No stripes on
the hull, looked a lot like Miss T (except a 15) but she did have unique
multi-colored sails.  It lives just across Sandusky Bay from BuscaBrisas, so
now that I know it's around I'll have to keep an eye out for it.  Sailed by
apparently a man and two boys, who seemed to be having fun!


Sunday, Busca was engaged in some survey work.  Two other Great Lakes
Cruising Club members and myself set out in the morning across the bay to
Bay Point, a large sand bar that blocks most of the entrance to the bay,
where we started motoring up and down the columns of a grid, recording
soundings at intervals.  The bar has grown and shifted a lot since I first
started sailing the area and the commercial charts are quite out of date.

As a testimony, when we were nearly done with the east side of the bar, a
Tartan 33 grounded heavily on the hard sand.  After a while, we went over to
see if we could be of assistance.  After much circling around, we took their
anchor out the length of the rode for them so they could kedge themselves
off.  All they had to winch with were the Genoa winches and the two older
gents just weren't able to winch the boat off, so eventually they called
Towboat US.

At this point, there was so much chop from powerboat wake that it was too
rough to resume our work in the shoals, so we had to call it a day with
plans to complete the work as soon as we can get a suitable day.

After the data is all compiled, a drawing of the entrance will be made and
it will be included in the next harbor report for the bay, one of thousands
of harbor reports that the club maintains for the entire Great Lakes.  I
have an entire shelf in a bookcase dedicated to nothing but these harbor
reports.

Bob G., the seniormost member of the three of us, explained the method he
wanted to use to collect the data, so I steered the course, he recorded the
depths, and Maggie watched the gps to tell me if I were to steer to port or
starboard and Bob when to note the depth.  It was not too easy trying to
steer following the course exactly and there seemed to be a current that was
pushing us eastward.

I'd like to experiment with OziExplorer/GPS interface and try recording
depths at random spaces while motoring or sailing around.  If I can figure
out a way to do it single-handed, then that would go a long way towards
allowing me to contribute to more harbor reports.

Tod
M17 #408
BuscaBrisas


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